MU researcher helped develop ‘One Love My Plan’ interactive tool

COLUMBIA, Mo. –Women between the ages of 18 and 24 are at the highest risk for dating violence, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. However, these women are less likely than older adults to seek formal safety resources and instead look to peers or technology for help and advice. In an effort to connect more young women with safety information, a University of Missouri researcher collaborated with Nancy Glass at Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing and the One Love Foundation to develop the “One Love My Plan” smartphone application, an interactive tool that helps college-age women in abusive relationships clarify their priorities and customize personal safety plans.

“At some point, almost everyone knows someone in an unhealthy relationship,” said Tina Bloom, an assistant professor at the MU Sinclair School of Nursing. “The purpose of the My Plan app is to quickly and confidentially provide women and concerned friends with information and available resources. Our goal is not to replace existing services, but to better connect students with them.”

To ensure that young women would find the app helpful and comprehensive, Bloom and her colleagues conducted focus groups with college-age women who identified themselves as survivors of abusive relationships.

“Students said that phones feel private, and they always have their phones with them,” Bloom said. “One student told us that she really liked the app because it provided strategies she could use immediately to help herself or a friend. In abusive situations, there are many factors to consider. The My Plan app gives students tools to examine their relationships, set their priorities and privately access resources when they are ready.”

Previous research shows that, across all socioeconomic backgrounds, millennials comprise the age group most likely to own smartphones, and many smartphone users access health information using their mobile devices. Bloom says the free app is filled with helpful features, including:

The One Love Foundation and the Urban Health Institute at Johns Hopkins University provided funding for development of the app. Nancy Glass at Johns Hopkins University led the study. Researchers Jacquelyn Campbell, James Case and Amber Clough from Johns Hopkins University; Megan Lindsay, Jill Theresa Messing, Jonel Thaller and Adrienne Baldwin at Arizona State University; and Karen B. Eden at Oregon Health and Science University also participated in the research and app development. The collaborative study, “Survivor feedback on a safety decision aid smartphone application for college-age women in abusive relationships,” was published online in the Journal of Technology in Human Services in December 2013.